The Broken Housing Market Conference - Highlights from Event on 1st June 2018

Highlights from our "Broken Housing Market" Conference, held on 1st June at Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE). This free one-day conference brought together leading academics, policymakers and practitioners to discuss what is "broken" about the UK housing market and how we might go about fixing it.

Some of the research themes emerging at the conference will be explored further in our next Economic Review, out on 1st August, as our Director Jagjit Chadha explains below, in the first of a selection of short clips featuring some the speakers.

Prof Ken Gibb, Director of the UK Collaborative Centre for Housing Evidence (CaCHE), giving an overview of the Conference:

Keynote speaker, Dame Kate Barker, explaining why supply is only part of the solution to the housing crisis:

Prof David Miles, Professor of Financial Economics at Imperial College London, highlights the key points from his presentation at the Conference:

Ian Mulheirn, Director of Consult at Oxford Economics, shares the main highlights from his presentation 'Modelling House Prices and Home Ownership':

Richard Donnell, Research and Insight Director, Hometrack, reflects on why we should not consider the housing market as one but many different markets:

Peter Levell, Senior Research Economist at the Institute For Fiscal Studies (IFS), discusses research that he presented at the Conference:

Prof Ken Gibb, Director of the UK Collaborative Centre for Housing Evidence (CaCHE), giving an overview of the Conference:

Keynote speaker, Dame Kate Barker, explaining why supply is only part of the solution to the housing crisis:

Prof David Miles, Professor of Financial Economics at Imperial College London, highlights the key points from his presentation at the Conference:

Ian Mulheirn, Director of Consult at Oxford Economics, shares the main highlights from his presentation 'Modelling House Prices and Home Ownership':

Richard Donnell, Research and Insight Director, Hometrack, reflects on why we should not consider the housing market as one but many different markets:

Peter Levell, Senior Research Economist at the Institute For Fiscal Studies (IFS), discusses research that he presented at the Conference: